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  1. Mar 12, 2015 · In March 1930, Mahatma Gandhi and his followers set off on a brisk 241-mile march to the Arabian Sea town of Dandi to lay Indian claim to the nation's own salt. By: Evan Andrews Updated: August...

  2. Salt March. Gandhi-Irwin Pact, agreement signed on March 5, 1931, between Mohandas K. Gandhi, leader of the Indian nationalist movement, and Lord Irwin (later Lord Halifax ), British viceroy (1926–31) of India. It marked the end of a period of civil disobedience ( satyagraha) in India against British rule that Gandhi and his followers had ...

  3. www.thoughtco.com › what-was-gandhis-salt-march-195475Gandhi's Salt March - ThoughtCo

    Aug 4, 2018 · On March 12, 1930, a group of Indian independence protesters began to march from Ahmedabad, India to the sea coast at Dandi some 390 kilometers (240 miles) away. They were led by Mohandas Gandhi, also known as the Mahatma, and intended to illegally produce their own salt from the seawater.

  4. Aug 19, 2021 · By Nadya Hayasi. The Salt March was one of the most famous early acts of civil disobedience, led by nonviolence leader Mahatma Gandhi as part of India’s protest to gain freedom from the British.

  5. Modern History. It was on 12 March 1930 that Mahatma Gandhi embarked on an unlikely odyssey. By that point, Gandhi – a London-trained lawyer who had risen to become a passionate campaigner for India’s independence from the British Empire – had already spearheaded civil disobedience in India.

  6. Overview. Salt March. Quick Reference. (12 March–6 April 1930) A march by Indian nationalists led by Mohandas Gandhi.

  7. The Salt March was a major nonviolent protest action in India led by Mohandas K. Gandhi in March–April 1930. It was directed against the British government’s tax on salt, which greatly affected the poorest Indians. The Salt March was one of the most successful campaigns in Gandhi’s struggle against British rule in India.

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